And then Howard Dean, an American politician who ran unsuccessfully for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, tweeted what everyone was thinking: “Notice Trump sniffing all the time. Coke user?”

Five million people tweeted about the debate – mostly about Trump.

According to the BBC, five million people were tweeting about the presidential debate – 62 per cent were about Trump, 444,000 were about NBC presenter Lester Holt, and 10,500 were about #UnlikelyDebateGuests.

A CNN/ORC poll found that 62 per cent of voters thought Clinton came out on top, with just 27 per cent giving the bout to Trump. However, only 26 per cent identified themselves as Republicans while 41 per cent identified themselves as Democrats.

An informal CNBC poll on its website has found 61 per cent of people thought Trump won, while 39 per cent went for Clinton. Trump has tweeted the results, but as CNBC points out, the poll is ‘not scientific’. Anyone, including those outside the U.S, appears to be able to vote.

But we won’t know for sure who will actually be the next President of The United States until the November 8 election. Countdown to judgement day.